Hanes Motsinger, Chief Program Officer

Hanes Motsinger grew up on a farm in State Road, North Carolina, a rural community located in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Throughout her childhood, she spent the weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas helping her grandparents on their small "choose and cut" Christmas tree farm in Allegheny County, North Carolina. In hindsight, that early experience piqued her wonder for the natural world and her curiosity about agriculture and land-based livelihoods.

Today, Hanes' professional life is defined by the pursuit of social and environmental justice, and her engagement with this work has consistently returned to food and agriculture. She has spent time working with farm-to-table kitchens, migrant farmworker rights organizations, agricultural land trusts, and the global coffee sector. She is ecstatic about joining The Nashville Food Project and diving deep into the work of building community and justice through food (what a dream)! When she's not at work, you can find Hanes beekeeping, playing clawhammer banjo, tasting new coffees from around the world, or visiting the mountains of North Carolina. She moved to Nashville in May 2019.

Toni Newsome, Meals Coordinator

Toni is from Memphis but made her way up to Nashville about two years ago. She joined the staff of The Nashville Food Project after a few nights of volunteering here. She loves to cook and create joy through food.

In Toni’s own words, “I think The Nashville Food Project is such a great place to work and give back to the community. I feel welcome here and will always encourage others to volunteer, cook, recycle, and grow with us at the Food Project.”

David Price, Meals Coordinator

David Price is almost a Nashville native (which counts as local these days) having lived on every side of the city at least once since he was transported here at age 4. He always manages to find work on the exact opposite side of town that he’s living so he has lots of time for self-reflection while sitting in traffic.

In his spare time, which is almost inconsequential, he enjoys hiking, thrifting, perusing records, and cooking/eating vegetables and other things that didn't have a mother or a face.

Technologically David is a Boomer, socially he is Gen X, and by way of media consumption he is Gen Alpha (Read: he hates computers, goes to bed at 8:30 p.m., and knows all the music your kid listens to and how to talk to them in their vernacular).

He loves all animals but is most fond of the ones someone tends to and that don't shed on his wardrobe of typical black T-shirts. His favorite color is grey but he does not own a grey guitar or feel so symbolic.

Amanda Richard, Director of Development

Growing up in rural Ohio, Amanda has always had a connection with farms and the land that grows our food. Her most favorite memories are the times spent in her small town with her grandparents growing tomatoes, green beans, and beets, fishing, and foraging for mushrooms. But her most formative time was spent in the kitchen with family. From standing on a chair at the counter learning to cook with her Pappa, to exploring new cultures through food with her mom, food has always been the center of her life.

Amanda moved to Nashville in 1998 to attend Belmont University. She received her degree in Music Business and worked in music publishing right out of college. She soon realized that she wanted more from her career and found herself drawn to nonprofit work. For over 17 years, Amanda has worked as a fundraiser at some of Nashville’s most notable nonprofits, including Second Harvest Food Bank, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Nashville Zoo, and the Adventure Science Center. Her most recent experiences at The Branch of Nashville and the global animal welfare organization, Compassion in World Farming, gave her greater insight into what it takes to create a sustainable, equitable food system.

Amanda is excited to join the team at TNFP and unite her personal passions of cooking, sharing meals, and building community with her professional fundraising and relationship building skills. When she’s not at TNFP, Amanda loves to cook and create recipes for her blog, read, and check out new restaurants with her husband.

Patricia Tarquino, Director of Community Agriculture

Patricia Tarquino, Director of Community Agriculture at The Nashville Food Project, is an immigrant from Cali, Colombia, South America. Patty is a Berea College graduate with a Bachelor’s of Science degree in Sociology. She has experience as a community organizer in the coalfields of Central Appalachia defending water, land and community rights, and now serves as Board Member of Cosecha Community Development and member-President of Grow 2 Learn Cooperative. Patricia is also a 2023 Community Food Systems Fellow through the Vital Village Network and Boston Medical Center and a Master Gardener.

Allison Thayer, Director of Community Engagement

Allison grew up in Florida with a Spanish mother who loved (and excelled at!) cooking, which she absorbed from a young age. As a child, she would watch Emeril Live and emphatically mimic his famous “Bam!” when helping in the kitchen. She also cares deeply about nature, conservation, and sustainable food production, and spends as much of her ‘time off’ as possible exploring the outdoors. Since moving to Nashville in 2015, she has been steadily inserting herself into the local food system: as a regular CSA customer, a member of the Nashville Food Co-Op, an active participant in events focused on local food production and waste reduction, and most recently as a weekly volunteer on the Caney Fork Farms Vegetable Team.

Allison has a degree in English and Latin American Studies from the University of Notre Dame. She moved to Spain to teach English through the Fulbright Program, then on to Washington DC to work as a research consultant for postsecondary education institutions. The rest (and majority) of her career has been spent working in corporate strategy and operations at a multinational research and consulting firm. She is delighted to be making a career shift that allows her to focus on growing sustainable food systems and communities.

Outside of work Allison enjoys cooking, hiking, and spending time with her husband, child, and dog. She dreams of one day owning a tapas bar or an on-farm restaurant, as long as it doesn’t have to be profitable.